Abstract

Tubular red and pink flowers often indicate bird pollination. Prionotes cerinthoides, a climbing shrub of thetemperate rainforest in Tasmania (Australia) and one of only two members of the most primitive clade of thesubfamily Styphelioideae (Ericaceae), has such flowers. We tested the hypothesis that P. cerinthoides is birdpollinated using breeding system experiments, observations of flower visitors, and invertebrate trapping.Flowering phenology, nectar availability, and flower damage were also recorded. Prionotes cerinthoides producedlittle viable seed in the absence of a pollinator but selfed readily when pollination was facilitated. It appears that P.cerinthoides depends largely on the pollination services of a single native bird species, the eastern spinebill(Acanthorhynchus tenuirostris). The only other flower visitor observed to contact anthers and stigma was the introduced bumblebee (Bombus terrestris). The crescent honeyeater (Phylidonyris pyrrhoptera), the introducedhoneybee (Apis mellifera), and the bumblebee were nectar robbers.